All the tech in the 2017-18 federal budget

E-health, BoM infosec, cyber office, and more.

By Allie Coyne  May 9 2017  8:30PM
https://www.itnews.com.au/news/all-the-tech-in-the-2017-18-federal-budget-461083?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=editors_picks&google_editors_picks=true


Government agencies did well out of this year’s federal budget, with the 
Coalition opening its wallet to fund initiatives in everything from e-health to 
cyber security.

Following the disastrous 2016 online Census, the government will hand the reins 
for cyber security governance across the public service to the Digital 
Transformation Agency through the creation of a new central Cyber Security 
Advisory Office (CSAO).

It will also give an undisclosed wad of cash to the Bureau of Meteorology to 
improve its IT security following the 2015 hack on the BoM’s systems.

Just over $374 million will be spent over the next two years to give every 
Australian an electronic health record by default.

Another $67.3 million will go towards the overhaul of the Medicare payments 
system.

The Immigration department has been handed $95.4 million to improve its storage 
and processing of biometric data and introduce a new risk processing system for 
travellers.

Australia’s banks will be forced to share a customer’s data when requested to 
do so by that customer. Treasury has been tasked with figuring out how the 
sharing scheme will work.

And Bitcoin enthusiasts will no longer need to pay the GST twice.


Other budget measures include:

$7 million for the ACCC to implement the broadband performance monitoring and 
reporting program.

$315.3 million for tranche two of the WPIT Centrelink IT systems replacement, 
as stated in the mid-year economic and fiscal outlook.

$8.9 million for a new cultural and corporate shared services centre at the 
National Museum of Australia that will provide shared functions to other 
collecting institutions. It will involve the consolidation of IT platforms.

$9 million for teleconferencing to facilitate Medicare-covered psychology 
services for those in rural and remote areas.

$15.3 million for Digital Earth Australia, a “world-first” national big data 
analysis capability that will “enable measurement and detection of changes 
across the Australian landscape over time”. It will translate almost three 
decades of existing satellite imagery to access insights into the health of the 
Australian continent.

A ban on the creation, use or sale of sales suppression technology that allows 
busineses to hide sales for the purpose of avoiding tax.

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Cheers,
Stephen
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